Each faces a maximum penalty of 35 years in prison on the murder charge. Randolph and Willis also face reckless endangerment charges. Randolph faces an additional charge of possession of a firearm, the complaint said.

A Milwaukee police officer said in an interview with investigators that he arrived at the victim's home near Appleton Avenue and Melvina Street and found Love-Schoos. She led him to her husband's body, lying near a bed. Love-Schoos appeared upset and crying, the complaint said.

In Love-Schoos' first interview with investigators, she said that she fell asleep near her husband and awakened around 6 a.m. to find a gunman and three others standing over her. One of them demanded money and threatened to shoot, the complaint said.

According to the complaint, a suspect dragged Schoos from the bed.

Some of the men began searching the couple's home. A man eventually dragged Love-Schoos into the breezeway and began searching a car, Love-Schoos told investigators. She said she heard two gunshots.

During a second interview with investigators, Love-Schoos changed her account of the incident. She confessed that, on the day before the homicide, she met LeFlore at a Scrub-a-Dub. She said they had sex and made a plan to have LeFlore rob Schoos' home.

Love-Schoos said she was "tired of arguing and fighting with the victim" and that the plan had been LeFlore's idea.

According to the complaint, she told detectives that LeFlore promised he would have a gun with the intention of waving it at Schoos. She said the robbery took place as she outlined in her first interview, and the last thing she heard her husband say was, "What did I do?"

LeFlore, during his own interview with detectives, said that he knew Love-Schoos and had engaged in sex with her several times over four years.

The complaint said he had been kicked out of his apartment on Oct. 19 and walked to Love-Schoos' house. She suggested to LeFlore that he rob Schoos' home. Love-Schoos told him that her husband would not be home.

The next day, he and four others including Randolph and Willis, attempted to rob a drug house, according to the complaint.

Next, they went to Schoos' home, the complaint said. LeFlore told investigators that he watched Randolph shoot Schoos inside his bedroom. He said the group took nothing from the home before they left.